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From high-tech clusters to open innovation ecosystems: a systematic literature review of the relationship between science and technology parks and universities

Journal

JOURNAL OF TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10961-022-09990-6

Keywords

Science parks; Technology parks; Innovation; Universities; Higher education institutions; Literature review

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Science and technology parks (STPs) are increasingly popular as a policy tool to promote innovation and economic development. This study presents a systematic literature review of research on STPs and their relationships with universities. The review finds three different phases in the evolution of this literature: a formation phase, a geographical expansion phase, and a topical expansion phase.
As part of the third mission of universities to promote innovation and economic development, the popularity of science and technology parks (STPs) as a policy tool is increasing. The co-location of innovative companies and universities should be conducive to knowledge exchange between universities and industry, thus leading to more innovation. However, STPs have evolved in different contexts and to serve different purposes. Furthermore, the research on them has evolved mainly through case studies of individual parks and it is scattered across different disciplinary conversations. Building on 1,711 articles published from 1985 onwards, this study presents a systematic literature review of research on STPs and their relationships with universities. We find three different phases in the evolution of this literature: a formation phase (before 2000), where the focus was on the creation of STPs; a geographical expansion phase (2000-2010) reflecting the geographical expansion of STPs to East Asia and other emerging economies, with heavy focus on high-technology firms mainly in ICT; and a topical expansion phase (2011 onwards) when the literature expands to cover a diversity of new topics, including open innovation and sustainability, reflecting broader changes in the understanding of innovation.

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